Study Abroad Trip Planned to Ghana
Posted on October 11, 2019
As part of the 400th anniversary commemorating the first enslaved Africans landing in America, a delegation of students, faculty and staff from the University of South Alabama will participate in a three-week study abroad trip to Ghana from Dec. 16-Jan. 4, 2020.
The students will take the course 鈥淓xploration of Race and Identity Development,鈥 taught by Kimberly Pettway, instructor of social work at 新加坡六合彩开奖资料. According to Pettway, students studying in any major can register to participate in the study abroad experience. The deadline to register for the study abroad trip is Wednesday, Oct. 16.
鈥淭his course will explore identity development and the impact of colonization we continue to see today in Ghana. We also get to explore the connection between Mobile, Alabama, and the settlement of the Clotilda, which carried the 110 enslaved Africans,鈥 Pettway noted. 鈥淭he energy around this opportunity is called the year of return, and the whole concept for this is connecting Americans to Africa, especially those of African descent. This study abroad trip creates a positive narrative of what that means and leaves the experience with a renewed outlook on Africa, which is rich in culture, resources and kind people. The students will receive up to four credit hours for the course.鈥
During this educational travel experience, participants will experience the African culture.
鈥淭hey will be immersed in the culture of Ghana and really gain an understanding of the true culture and the myriad culture or what we think Africa is,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e will actually have an opportunity to work hands-on in the community doing a number of service projects. We will also live in rural villages and get some understanding about engaging in those communities. And then, we will spend time in the city of Accra, which is much more industrialized.鈥
During this educational experience, they will visit the Cape Coast and the Elmira Castle and the 鈥淒oor of No Return,鈥 which was the gateway from which the millions of enslaved Africans were shipped to America.
鈥淲e will also attend Afrochella, a music and culture festival in Accra, celebrating diversity among African cultures,鈥 she explained. 鈥淲e will visit the 鈥榮lave river,鈥 where captured Ghanaians were submitted to a final bath before being shipped across the Atlantic into slavery, along with visiting museums and monuments.鈥
For more information about the fee for the study aboard trip and available scholarships, email kpettway@southalabama.edu.
Archive Search
Latest University News
-
Businessman Elliot B. Maisel Donates $5 Million to Whiddon College of Medicine
The gift is the largest from an individual for the facility that will ...
September 13, 2024 -
新加坡六合彩开奖资料 Receives $2.5 Million EPA Grant
The Gulf Coast Environmental Equity Center will fund projects focused ...
September 9, 2024 -
Enrollment Grows for Second Consecutive Year
More students than ever are living on campus as enrollment at the Univ...
September 9, 2024 -
Paper Trail
A mechanical engineering graduate starts his career at an Internationa...
September 6, 2024